| Literature DB >> 14633274 |
Victor M Montori1, Nancy L Wilczynski, Douglas Morgan, R Brian Haynes.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systematic reviews summarize all pertinent evidence on a defined health question. They help clinical scientists to direct their research and clinicians to keep updated. Our objective was to determine the extent to which systematic reviews are clustered in a large collection of clinical journals and whether review type (narrative or systematic) affects citation counts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14633274 PMCID: PMC281591 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-1-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Purpose categories: definitions and criteria of methodological rigor
| Etiology (causation and safety) | Content pertains directly to determining if there is an association between an exposure and a disease or condition. The question is "What causes people to get a disease or condition?" | Observations concerned with the relationship between exposures and putative clinical outcomes; data collection is prospective; clearly identified comparison group(s); blinding of observers of outcome to exposure. |
| Prognosis | Content pertains directly to the prediction of the clinical course or the natural history of a disease or condition with the disease or condition existing at the beginning of the study. | Inception cohort of individuals all initially free of the outcome of interest; follow-up of at least 80% of patients until occurrence of a major study end point or to the end of the study; analysis consistent with study design. |
| Diagnosis | Content pertains directly to using a tool to arrive at a diagnosis of a disease or condition. | Inclusion of a spectrum of participants; objective diagnostic reference standard OR current clinical standard for diagnosis; participants received both the new test and some form of the diagnostic standard; interpretation of the diagnostic standard without knowledge of test result and vise versa; analysis consistent with study design. |
| Treatment | Content pertains directly to an intervention for therapy (including adverse effects studies), prevention, rehabilitation, quality improvement, or continuing medical education. | Random allocation of participants to comparison groups; outcome assessment of at least 80% of those entering the investigation accounted for in 1 major analysis at any given follow-up assessment; analysis consistent with study design. |
| Economics | Content pertains directly to the economics of a healthcare issue with the economic question addressed being based on the comparison of alternatives. | Question is a comparison of the alternatives; alternative services or activities compared on outcomes produced (effectiveness) and resources consumed (costs); evidence of effectiveness must from a study of real patients that meets the above-noted criteria for diagnosis, treatment, quality improvement, or a systematic review article; effectiveness and cost estimates based on individual patient data (micro-economics); results presented in terms of the incremental or additional costs and outcomes of one intervention over another; sensitivity analysis if there is uncertainty. |
| Clinical prediction guide | Content pertains directly to the prediction of some aspect of a disease or condition. | Guide is generated in one or more sets of real patients (training set); guide is validated in another set of real patients (test set). |
* Other study categories included qualitative (studies that pertain directly to how people feel or experience certain situations using data collection methods and analyses appropriate for qualitative data) and a category 'something else' to include studies with a content that did not fit any of the above definitions.
The 20 clinical journals that published the most systematic reviews in 2000
| COCHRANE LIBRARY | 444 (100.0) | 427 (96.2) |
| LANCET | 61 (9.7) | 23 (37.7) |
| ARCH INTERN MED | 61 (17.4) | 21 (34.4) |
| BMJ | 154 (32.6) | 20 (13.0) |
| ANN INTERN MED | 34 (21.1) | 14 (41.2) |
| JAMA | 37 (8.3) | 14 (37.8) |
| J FAM PRACT | 24 (22.9) | 13 (54.2) |
| CHEST | 69 (13.5) | 12 (17.4) |
| OBSTET GYNECOL | 13 (3.8) | 8 (61.5) |
| SPINE | 23 (5.9) | 8 (34.8) |
| STROKE | 17 (4.3) | 7 (41.2) |
| NEUROLOGY | 54 (8.0) | 7 (13.0) |
| J CLIN ONCOL | 35 (7.9) | 7 (20.0) |
| CMAJ | 65 (43.9) | 6 (9.2) |
| J ADV NURS | 33 (12.5) | 6 (18.2) |
| SCHIZOPHR BULL | 9 (15.8) | 6 (66.7) |
| J RHEUMATOL | 19 (4.6) | 6 (31.6) |
| DIABETES CARE | 20 (5.8) | 5 (25.0) |
| J GEN INTERN MED | 9 (8.5) | 5 (55.6) |
| AM J MED | 50 (26.2) | 5 (10.0) |
The five clinical journals that published the most systematic reviews by purpose category in 2000
| COCHRANE LIBRARY | 444 | 427 | 420 (63.4) |
| BMJ | 154 | 20 | 19 (2.9) |
| LANCET | 61 | 23 | 16 (2.4) |
| ARCH INTERN MED | 61 | 21 | 10 (1.5) |
| ANN INTERN MED | 34 | 14 | 10 (1.5) |
| CHEST | 69 | 12 | 7 (14.9) |
| ARCH INTERN MED | 61 | 21 | 6 (12.8) |
| ANN INTERN MED | 34 | 14 | 4 (8.5) |
| RADIOLOGY | 27 | 4 | 4 (8.5) |
| J GEN INTERN MED | 9 | 5 | 3 (6.4) |
*, percentage of all systematic reviews in same category
The five clinical journals that published the most systematic reviews by audience in 2000
| J ADV NURS | 33 (12.5) | 6 (18.2) |
| PATIENT EDUC COUNS | 4 (6.3) | 3 (75.0) |
| J CLIN NURS | 14 (17.5) | 3 (21.4) |
| J PEDIATR ONCOL NURS | 9 (64.3) | 1 (11.1) |
| J NURS SCHOLAR | 11 (25.0) | 1 (9.1) |
| COCHRANE LIBRARY | 444 (100.0) | 427 (96.2) |
| LANCET | 61 (9.7) | 23 (37.7) |
| ARCH INTERN MED | 61 (17.4) | 21 (34.4) |
| BMJ | 154 (32.6) | 20 (13.0) |
| ANN INTERN MED | 34 (21.1) | 14 (41.2) |